Twitter's Attempt To Clean Up Spammers Meant That People Sarcastically Tweeting 'Kill Me' Were Suspended
from the not-helpful dept
Just recently, Senator Amy Klobuchar suggested that the government should start fining social media platforms that don't remove bots fast enough. We've pointed out how silly and counterproductive (not to mention unconstitutional) this likely would be. However, every time we see people demanding that these platforms better moderate their content, we end up with examples of why perhaps we really don't want those companies to be making these kinds of decisions.
You may have heard that, over the weekend, Twitter started its latest sweep of accounts to shutdown. Much of the focus was on so-called Tweetdeckers, which were basically a network of teens using Tweetdeck software to retweet accounts for money. In particular, it was widely reported that a bunch of accounts known for copying (without attribution) the marginally funny tweets of others and then paying "Tweetdeckers" for mass promotion. These accounts were shutdown en masse over the weekend.
Twitter noted that the sweep was about getting rid of spammers:
A spokesperson for Twitter told HuffPost on Saturday that the sweep was a part of a broader company effort to fight spam on the platform. Last month, Twitter announced it would be making changes to TweetDeck and restricted people from using the app to retweet the same tweet across multiple accounts.
“Keeping Twitter safe and free from spam is a top priority for us,” the company said in a February blog post. “One of the most common spam violations we see is the use of multiple accounts and the Twitter developer platform to attempt to artificially amplify or inflate the prominence of certain Tweets.”
Fair enough. But some people noticed that not everyone swept up in this mass suspensions were involved in such shady practices. The Twitter account @madblackthot2, whose main account (drop the "2") appears to have been temporarily suspended, put together a fascinating thread about how Twitter appeared to be suspending accounts based on keywords around self-harm with a few different examples of people having their accounts suspended for old tweets in which they sarcastically said "kill me."
tw : s**c*de
I don't know what's funnier: that twitter suspended me for a tweet from August that said "that's how Maine I am, k*ll me", or that twitter's policy when they think someone is at risk of self-harm is to cut them off from social networks by suspending them. lmaoooo pic.twitter.com/kndBbNMz4J
— Coffee Spoonie (@coffeespoonie) March 6, 2018
I’m gonna continue to add examples of it happening to people to prove my point. If it’s happened to you, please feel free to reply to this with a screenshot of what Twitter sent you. pic.twitter.com/yW7nztigYh
— THE TEMPORARILY SUSPENDED ORACLE (@madblackthot2) March 11, 2018
Twitter is suspending accounts for using what they consider trigger words that incite violence or promote self-harm, no matter what the context is, or how old the tweets are. (The middle screenshot is from a verified artist so truly nobody is exempt)
Examples: pic.twitter.com/uvAlpTFD83
— backup account (@madblackthot2) March 10, 2018
There are more examples as well. Not everyone who tweets "kill me" is getting suspended, so at least the algorithm is slightly more sophisticated than that. One explanation given is that when a user is reported for certain reasons, the system then searches through past tweets for specific keywords. Perhaps that works in some contexts, but clearly not all of them.
And, again we end up in a situation where demanding that a social media platform do "more moderation!" to kill off bad accounts leads to lots of collateral damage in the dumbest possible way. And, yet, at the same time, people are quickly finding new election propaganda Twitter bots sprouting up like weeds.
This is not to say that Twitter shouldn't be doing anything. The company is clearly trying to figure out what to do and how to handle some of these issues. The issue is that companies are inevitably going to be bad at this. And, yet, the constant push from politicians is to make them more and more legally responsible for not fucking up such things -- which is basically an impossible task. If Twitter were legally mandated to remove certain types of accounts, it's likely that we'd end up seeing many, many more examples of bad takedowns a la the "kill me" suspensions.
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Filed Under: algorithms, content moderation, kill me. jokes, suspensions
Companies: twitter
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INTENDED: "lots of collateral damage in dumbest possible way"
It's now standard Masnickism, at least a dozen times, to write: "Look how Twitter is incompetent! And you want them policing?"
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Re: INTENDED: "lots of collateral damage in dumbest possible way"
IF isn't deliberate incompetence, then Twitter definitely needs regulation.
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Re: Re: INTENDED: "lots of collateral damage in dumbest possible way"
But I say the key problem is that Twitter isn't FORCED to use common law. They have no incentive to -- indeed, Masnick says that corporations can arbitrarily remove persons -- and no punishment for mis-using the Public Trust that they've agreed to. -- That's easily fixed: JAIL top Twitter executives until get their minds right.
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Re: Re: Re: INTENDED: "lots of collateral damage in dumbest possible way"
At same time, more or less, was a return to censoring, I mean "hiding" my comments, that I was more or less promised wouldn't be done any more, and indeed was not for several months. (By the way, proving was Administrator-controlled all along.)
I just don't believe that Masnick actually grasps the TWO-WAY nature of "teh internets", in which he gives up control by offering HTML code input that I get to use. Masnick believes that he has -- in absence of any stated reserve -- sole control over the site. But it's simply not true in practice. Sure wish you'd quit living in the 20th C, Masnick.
Nor does he actually believe in the "free speech" he so often touts, because to censor, I mean "hide", my little bits of text is clearly contradictory.
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Re: Re: Re: Re: INTENDED: "lots of collateral damage in dumbest possible way"
You do know that it’s the users who hide your comments by flagging them, not Masnick, right?
Also, it honestly makes no difference whether the censorship leans left or right; that has absolutely nothing to do with what Masnick is complaining about, which is where content that had absolutely no reason to be censored is causing entire accounts to be suspended unintentionally.
That’s what collateral damage is: damage inflicted unintentionally while trying to get others. Political leanings guiding blocks or bans would be intentional “damage”.
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Re: Re: Re: Re: INTENDED: "lots of collateral damage in dumbest possible way"
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What shouldn't be on the table is legal pressure and making them liable for activity they can't prevent without unicorn magic.
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Re: Re: Re: INTENDED: "lots of collateral damage in dumbest possible way"
(But you do know what spam is.)
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Re: Re: Re: Re: Re: INTENDED: "lots of collateral damage in dumbest possible way"
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Remember when you said you’d stop saying common law?
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No, not really
They'll only be bad at it if they really want to be -- that is, if they refuse to learn anything from all the successes and failures (especially the latter) that preceded them.
This isn't new. It's just another version of a problem that's repeatedly surfaced over decades, which is why there are now a lot of well-known approaches to dealing with it. Of course every version of this problem has its own unique characteristics, and thus not every approach will work -- but some of them will. All the people at Twitter have to do is pay attention to history.
I hope they are. But gaffs like this strongly suggest to me that they're not.
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Re: No, not really
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Some Twitter Users Are Eggs
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"Happy 29th Birthday" message from web inventor Tim Berners-Lee
These dominant platforms are able to lock in their position by creating barriers for competitors. They acquire startup challengers, buy up new innovations and hire the industry’s top talent. Add to this the competitive advantage that their user data gives them and we can expect the next 20 years to be far less innovative than the last.
What’s more, the fact that power is concentrated among so few companies has made it possible to weaponise the web at scale."
https://webfoundation.org/2018/03/web-birthday-29/
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By close of business on Monday there were 10 times as many.
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Re: "Happy 29th Birthday" message from web inventor Tim Berners-Lee
Is that the takeaway here? That - worst case scenario - we're just back to the 'Big Three' era of television while completely ignoring UHF, tapes, cable?
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Oh, THAT guy...
Yeah, I kind lost any interest in what that particular individual might say(though I will note that it's particularly funny for him to be complaining about lock-in given the following) when he made clear his support of EME, turning the previous HTML standard into one with baked in DRM support, and rejected a proposal that would have protected security researchers.
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Senator Amy Klobuchar - You owe $25,000 for your violation of oath to protect the Constitution.
Of course that's just small potatoes given all of the hidden slush funds, insider trading, & "donations" that Congress collects. One might think that clearing the corruption out of the halls of Congress would be way more important that some bot retweeted a "stolen" joke to go viral.
Stop trying to wrap the world in nerf to protect us from reality & do something important... like out all of the sexual abusers we paid our money to protect from lawsuits & prosecution so they could stay in the halls of Congress.
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